Categories
Major League Fishing - Bass Pro Tour/Cup Events

Powroznik Rallies for Win in Bass Pro Tour Favorite Fishing Stage Three Raleigh presented by Evinrude

RALEIGH, N.C. (March 31, 2019) – When it all comes down to it, the Major League Fishing® (MLF) format has always been about identifying fishing conditions on the fly, and making the right adjustments as those conditions change.
MLF pro Jacob Powroznik learned enough from the first fish he saw on Championship Sunday to tell him all he needed to know. That fish, which rolled on a floating worm in the first pocket that the Virginia pro fished on Shearon Harris Reservoir, clued Powroznik in that the lake’s largemouth were in extremely shallow water and spawning.
Powroznik didn’t catch that fish, but it caused him to pick up a wacky-rigged 5-inch V&M Chopstick and start fishing for spawners. It was the right decision: Powroznik connected with 20 fish for 63 pounds, 4 ounces to earn a shiny new red-and-silver trophy and the $100,000 first-place check at the Bass Pro Tour Favorite Fishing Stage Three Raleigh presented by Evinrude.
“I saw that fish swim over on that floating worm, and I knew right then fish were spawning,” Powroznik said. “They were really shallow, and I picked that wacky-worm up right then and didn’t take it out of my hand the rest of the day.” 

From sight fishing to casting
Powroznik, one of the most skilled sight-fishermen in the field, dedicated some time early in the day to bedding fish, but then pulled off the beds and started casting to shallow water when mid-day clouds spoiled the visibility. That, too, proved to be a key decision.
“I love sight fishing, but the farther you stay off of them, the better,” Powroznik confirmed. “Those fish were in a foot of water, so they wanted something real subtle. It’s probably a good thing that it got cloudy and I couldn’t see those fish anymore, or I might’ve spent the day trying to get fish to bite sight-fishing to them. It turned out that it was better to cast to points that were a little further out toward the mouths of those pockets instead.”

MLF pro Jacob Powroznik wacky-wormed his way to the MLF Stage Three win on North Carolina’s Shearon Harris Reservoir with a total catch for the day of 20 scorable bass weighing a cumulative 63 pounds, 4 ounces.

It was far from a runaway for Powroznik
Jacob Wheeler, who finished second with 59-10, piled up 44-3 through two periods, most of it on a frog. Wheeler finished out Period 2 with an 8-5 that pushed the Tennessee pro to a seemingly comfortable lead of 9-11 heading into the final period.
Wheeler’s frog bite slowed down over the final two hours, though. Powroznik, meanwhile, worked his way through a 32-pound final period to chip away at Wheeler, eventually catching two 4-pounders and a 6-4 in the final hour to take a lead that he never relinquished.
“Obviously, to come up a little short, it always stings a little bit,” Wheeler said. “The conditions got right for a topwater and I got dialed in on that and took the lead. I knew at Shearon Harris you had to keep catching them, because you know there’s really good fish to be caught. Ultimately, I could sit here and complain, but there are plenty of other guys who would like to be in the position that I was.”

Rounding out the Top 10
Takahiro Omori finished third with 52-11, followed by Edwin Evers (43-13) and Mark Daniels, Jr. (30-13) to round out the Top 5. Ott DeFoe finished sixth with 26-1, followed by Jeff Sprague (25-14), Alton Jones (21-8), Jared Lintner (13-8) and Russ Lane (11-13).

Moving on to Stage Four
The 80-angler Bass Pro Tour field will have a short rest week before returning to competition April 9-14 at Lake Chickamauga in Dayton, Tennessee, at the Econo Lodge Stage Four Dayton presented by Winn Grips. 

Quotable
Takahiro Omori (3rd/52-11) – “Well, the most likely thing was in the afternoon I was in the right area. In the morning, I wasted a lot of time, out in the mud. Once you get in the right area and get hooked up with the right bait, you know you’re going to have fun. It’s springtime, so it’s good.”
Edwin Evers (4th/43-13) – “I’m just on a little roll, man. I’m really excited about Major League Fishing, and it’s kind of reinvigorated my career. I’m ate up with it right now. I’m enjoying it again and it’s been a long time since I’ve enjoyed it. I’m just having a lot of fun, making good decisions, and having fun catching them. It’s humbling to be able to have three Top 10s like that, I don’t know what to say about it. I’m just going to be thankful for three great tournaments, which I am.”

Categories
MLF BIG-5

LAWYER WINS FLW TOUR AT GRAND LAKE PRESENTED BY MERCURY MARINE

GROVE, Okla. (March 31, 2019) – Photo courtesy of FLW Fishing

The FLW Tour at Grand Lake presented by Mercury Marine promised a dramatic finish Sunday as all of the final top-10 anglers competing were within striking distance of first place and the title of Grand Lake Champion. When the scales settled, it was bass Pro Shops pro Jeremy Lawyer of Sarcoxie, Missouri, who had caught enough weight to earn the first FLW Tour victory of his career.

Lawyer’s final-day catch of five bass weighing 13 pounds, 14 ounces gave him a four-day total of 62-12 and the win via tiebreaker – the Day Three standings – over international angler Michael Matthee of Centurion, Gauteng, South Africa, who also weighed in a four-day total of 62-12, but started the day fourth place. Lawyer started the day in place and earned the win and the first place prize of $125,000.

“I can’t even express what this means,” said Lawyer, the 2016 Bass Fishing League (BFL) All-American Champion who is fishing his third season on the FLW Tour. “I dreamt for years of making the All-American, then I finally made it there and won it. That was a huge milestone for my family – my bank account, my fishing career, everything. Now, to get a win at the Tour level, it’s unbelievable. And to do it here with my friends following me on a lake that I’ve got a lot of history with and love for, gosh, it couldn’t be any better.”

Lawyer said that he caught all 20 of the fish that he weighed in this week on spinnerbaits, his key one being a ¾-ounce Freedom Lures Swing head spinnerbait thrown on a 7-foot, 6-inch Lew’s Magnum Heavy Cover rod and Lew’s Pro Magnesium reel spooled with 20-pound Sunline fluorocarbon. He credited his knowledge of the lake as being the key to his victory.

“I fished four different areas of the lake. I might have retreaded some of the same water, but I started somewhere completely new every day,” Lawyer said. “I fished everything from Honey Creek to the Dam. It was so random. My five fish that I caught today came on five different things. One came off of a little pipe this morning. My big one came off of a laydown. One came off of a little secondary point that didn’t have anything there. Another came off of a big old tree that was almost completely out of the water way in the back of a creek. And it’s been that way all week.”

Like most of the FLW Tour field, Lawyer said the fishing was a grind. He caught seven keepers on each of the first two days of competition, six keepers on Saturday and just five keepers on Sunday. Despite the tough conditions, Lawyer declared that Grand Lake was still in great shape.

“If we were here just two weeks later, it’d be stupid what we catch,” Lawyer said. “The lake is in great shape, but the weather is just what held us all back this week. That probably worked in my favor.

“Getting the win from the tiebreaker just goes to show how tight the competition is on the FLW Tour,” Lawyer went on to say. “Everyone out here can catch them, and it really shows the power of catching five every day. I caught a tiny little line-burner today that I was embarrassed to bring to weigh-in, but boy, am I glad that I brought him along.”

The top 10 pros on Grand Lake finished:                                                                                                            

              1st:          Bass Pro Shops pro Jeremy Lawyer, Sarcoxie, Mo., 20 bass, 62-12, $127,500

              2nd:         Michael Matthee, Centurion, Gauteng, South Africa, 18 bass, 62-12, $30,200

              3rd:         Miles Burghoff, Hixson, Tenn., 18 bass, 61-3, $25,500

              4th:         Berkley pro John Cox, DeBary, Fla., 17 bass, 59-9, $20,100

              5th:         Bradford Beavers, Summerville, S.C., 19 bass, 58-4, $19,000

              6th:         Billy McCaghren, Mayflower, Ark., 18 bass, 58-1, $18,000

              7th:         Bryan Thrift, Shelby, N.C., 16 bass, 56-7, $17,000

              8th:         Brian Latimer, Belton, S.C., 12 bass, 46-12, $16,000

              9th:         Jamie Horton, Centerville, Ala., 14 bass, 43-5, $15,000

              10th:       Sheldon Collings, Grove, Okla., 15 bass, 39-9, $14,000

Complete results for the entire field can be found at FLWFishing.com.

Overall there were 31 bass weighing 102 pounds, 8 ounces caught by pros Sunday. Five of the final 10 pros weighed in five-bass limits.

Television coverage of the FLW Tour at Grand Lake presented by Mercury will premiere in 2019. The Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show airs each Saturday night at 7 p.m. EST and is broadcast to more than 63 million cable, satellite and telecommunications households in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean on the World Fishing Network (WFN), the leading entertainment destination and digital resource for anglers throughout North America. FLW television is also distributed internationally to FLW partner countries, including Canada, China, Italy, Korea, Mexico, Portugal, Spain and South Africa.

The total purse for the FLW Tour at Grand Lake presented by Mercury was more than $860,000. The tournament was hosted by the City of Grove and the Cherokee Casino Grove. The next event for FLW Tour anglers will be the FLW Tour at Cherokee Lake presented by Lowrance, in Jefferson City Tennessee, April 11-14. The tournament will be hosted by the Economic Development Alliance of Jefferson County.

In FLW Tour competition, the full field of 165 pro anglers competed in the two-day opening round Thursday and Friday. The top 30 pros based on their two-day accumulated weight advanced to fish on Saturday. Only the top 10 pros continued competition Sunday, with the winner determined by the heaviest accumulated weight from the four days of competition.

Throughout the season, anglers are also vying for valuable points in hopes of qualifying for the 2019 FLW Cup, the world championship of professional bass fishing. The 2019 FLW Cup will be on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas, Aug. 9-11 and is hosted by the Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism and Visit Hot Springs.

Categories
MLF BIG-5

FLW TOUR HEADS TO CHEROKEE LAKE FOR FIFTH EVENT OF SEASON

March 28, 2019  by FLW Communications Photo courtesy of FLW Fishing

JEFFERSON CITY, Tenn. – Fishing League Worldwide (FLW), the world’s largest tournament fishing organization,  is heading to Jefferson City to take on Cherokee Lake, April 11-14, for the FLW Tour at Cherokee Lake presented by Lowrance. Hosted by the Economic Development Alliance of Jefferson County, the tournament will feature four days of bass-fishing action from 165 of the world’s best bass-fishing professionals competing for a top award of up to $125,000 and valuable points in hopes of qualifying for the 2019 FLW Cup – the world championship of bass fishing.

Although Cherokee Lake has hosted multiple T-H Marine FLW Bass Fishing League (BFL) events over the years, this event will mark the first time the FLW Tour has ever visited the fishery. The total purse for the FLW Tour at Cherokee Lake presented by Lowrance – the 215th event in FLW Tour history – is more than $860,000.

“Everybody knows you can go up the river to catch largemouth on Cherokee Lake. It’s got a decent population of largemouth, but I don’t think it can withstand the fishing pressure of a tournament of our size over four days,” said pro Jason Abram of Piney Flats, Tennessee, a 10-year FLW Tour veteran. “I think it’s going to take a mixed bag – largemouth and smallmouth – to win.

“The smallmouth population in Cherokee Lake is pretty strong still,” Abram continued. “It’s very possible that they could be bedding, although the TVA started dropping the water last week and that could hold them off. In my opinion, the majority of the anglers in the top 50 will likely be fishing for smallmouth.”

With both species of bass in play, it will be a crucial decision for tournament competitors. Abram said that smallmouth would likely be heavily targeted in staging areas – points and chunk rock – before moving in to spawn on pea-gravel banks. Abram expects the largemouth to also play a big role for anglers and predicted that the majority would be caught up the Holston River.

“These guys are used to running around flipping bushes and docks, but in East Tennessee, when the water is low, we don’t have that, Abram said. “We’re going to have to decipher what kind of rock and what depth of rock they are on.

“Someone is going to figure out how to catch a largemouth first thing, and then catch some smallmouth to fill out a limit. Or, they’re going to catch a limit of smallmouth and then go flipping or shallow-cranking for largemouth and catch that 4- or 5-pounder that puts them where they need to be,” Abram went on to say. “We’re just going to have to figure them out when we get there.”

The Tennessee pro estimated that a four-day cumulative weight of 58 pounds should be enough to earn the victory on Championship Sunday.

Anglers will take off at 7 a.m. EST each day from the TVA Dam Boat Launch, located at 2805 N. Highway 92, in Jefferson City. Thursday and Friday’s weigh-ins, April 11-12, will be held near the launch beginning at 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday’s weigh-ins, April 13-14, will also be held near the launch, but will begin at 4 p.m.

Prior to weigh-in each day, FLW will host a free Family Fishing Expo at the TVA Dam Boat Launch from 2 to 6 p.m. The Expo is a chance for fishing fans to meet their favorite anglers, enjoy interactive games, activities and giveaways provided by FLW sponsors, as well as learn more about the sport of fishing and other outdoor activities.

Also for youth, the FLW Foundation’s Unified Fishing Derby will be held at the TVA Dam Boat Launch on Saturday, April 13, from Noon-2 p.m. The event is hosted by FLW Foundation pro Cody Kelley along with other FLW Tour anglers, and is free and open to anyone under the age of 18 and Special Olympics athletes. Rods and reels are available for use, but youth are encouraged to bring their own if they own one. The 1st and 2nd place anglers that catch the most fish will be recognized Saturday on the FLW Tour stage, just prior to the pros weighing in.

Television coverage of the FLW Tour at Cherokee Lake presented by Lowrance will premiere in 2019. The exact air-date will be announced soon. The Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show airs each Saturday night at 7 p.m. EST and is broadcast to more than 63 million cable, satellite and telecommunications households in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean on the World Fishing Network (WFN), the leading entertainment destination and digital resource for anglers throughout North America. FLW television is also distributed internationally to FLW partner countries, including Canada, China, Italy, Korea, Mexico, Portugal, Spain and South Africa.

The popular FLW Live on-the-water program will air on Days Three and Four of the event, featuring live action from the boats of the tournament’s top pros each day. Host Travis Moran will be joined by veteran FLW Tour pro Todd Hollowell to break down the extended action each day from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. On-the-water broadcasts will be live streamed on FLWFishing.com, the FLW YouTube channel and the FLW Facebook page.

In FLW Tour competition, the full field of 165 pro anglers compete in the two-day opening round on Thursday and Friday. The top 30 pros based on their two-day accumulated weight advance to Saturday. Only the top 10 pros continue competition Sunday, with the winner determined by the heaviest accumulated weight from the four days of competition.

Throughout the season, anglers are also vying for valuable points in hopes of qualifying for the 2019 FLW Cup, the world championship of professional bass fishing. The 2019 FLW Cup will be on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas, Aug. 9-11 and is hosted by the Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism and Visit Hot Springs.

Categories
Major League Fishing - Bass Pro Tour/Cup Events

KNOCKOUT ROUND FIELD SET AS GROUP B’S TOP 20 ADVANCE AT MLF BASS PRO TOUR STAGE THREE

RALEIGH, N.C. (March 28, 2019) – When you take a quick look down the standings of Elimination Round 2 of the Major League Fishing® (MLF) Bass Pro Tour Favorite Fishing Stage Three Raleigh presented by Evinrude, three names should stand out: Brandon Palaniuk, Russ Lane and Jeff Sprague. While only one of the three finished in the Top 5 – Palaniuk was fourth, Lane was sixth, Sprague was 10th – the numbers to pay the closest attention to are their SCORETRACKER™ catches for the day on Falls Lake: Palaniuk piled up 42 pounds, 5 ounces on 16 fish, Lane weighed in 36-15 and Sprague finished with 33-7. Strong numbers, to be sure, but especially notable because those three anglers started the morning in the bottom 10 in the standings after their Shotgun Round and executed the kind of dramatic turnarounds that would lead a betting soul to believe that they’ve figured something special out on Falls.


Brandon Palaniuk’s 6-1 helped him to 42-5 in Elimination Round competition on Falls Lake.

“I learned that I’m way better on Falls Lake than I am on Jordan Lake,” Palaniuk joked. “The amount of cover in Jordan is crazy – Falls really doesn’t have that much cover, so you’ve really got to search hard to find it in certain spots. That’s what I felt like I stumbled onto today, and it worked out well. I just hope it holds up – I’m glad that we’re going back to Falls tomorrow and not going back to Jordan, because I never got to the right area in Jordan. I feel like if it holds out, I feel like I have Falls dialed in way better than I did Jordan.” 

Squeaking above the Elimination Line The competition around the Elimination Line came down to a battle of less than 2 pounds among Jeff Kriet, Dave Lefebre and Marty Robinson. Kriet scraped together 12-10 to finish the day with 33-10, and then hung on to the final spot as Robinson climbed to within 1-7. “I was 48 years old when I started the day, and now I’m 72,” Kriet joked, referring to the stress of the final hour of competition.

What about Jordon, Walker, etc.? Saturday’s X-factor is the group of anglers in both Groups A and B whose Shotgun Round weights offered them the luxury of spending most of their Elimination days practicing and becoming more familiar with the nooks and crannies of Falls. David Walker, for example, weighed in only four fish for 9 pounds on the day; Casey Ashley weighed just one fish … but it was a 7-6 hawg. “There’s no part of this lake I haven’t seen now, so I do have a good feel for it,” Walker admitted. “Some of the guys have been laying off (their fish) for sure, but I still feel like I’m searching for a good answer to it. It can be so maddening to figure that out, and honest to God, one cast can clue you in to what you should be doing. It can be just that simple. But I feel like I’m still going to be scrambling a little bit.”   

The last shot at Falls Weights will be zeroed for Saturday’s Knockout Round at Falls, so it’s a fresh start for all who have advanced. Many of the anglers fishing the previous two days of Elimination Round competition expressed some anxiety about leaving behind the big-fish bonanza that occurred on Jordan Lake in the Shotgun Rounds. And who could blame them: Kelly Jordon racked up a Bass Pro Tour-record weight of 82-4 during Day 1 of Shotgun Round action on Jordan Lake, and several anglers experienced near-record days on that fishery.   But after a full day on Falls, most of the remaining 40 anglers have now settled into areas and patterns that they’re more comfortable with in the one-day “shootout” format of the Knockout Round.   “I got to Falls and was actually impressed with how warm the water had gotten,” Sprague said. “I really thought these fish would be progressing a little further, similar to what they were doing at Jordan, so after the first period I decided to make a change. I figured I’m either going to go home with the four fish I have on the SCORETRACKER or fish and go catch them. We ran up to an area where I had practiced, I’d only had one bite in practice but it was right, just the fish hadn’t set-up there yet, and today they were there. The warm weather has allowed them to funnel in and hopefully tonight, more of them will funnel in there and we’ll thrash them tomorrow.” 

The Day’s Results   To see all results from today’s Elimination Round, who is competing in the Knockout Round and to keep up with cumulative results throughout the week, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com and click “Results.”  

How, When & Where to Watch Knockout Round Competition among the final 40 anglers begins Saturday at 7:30 a.m. ET, with live, official scoring available via SCORETRACKER on MajorLeagueFishing.com and on the MLF app. The MLF NOW! live stream starts at 10 a.m. ET, with live, on-the-water coverage continuing until lines out at 3:30 p.m. The Berkley Postgame Show live stream will start at approximately 5 p.m. daily.

Categories
MLF BIG-5

DAY 1 GRAND SLAM – FLW TOUR AT GRAND LAKE

March 28, 2019  by FLW Communications – Photo courtesy of FLW Fishing

GROVE, Okla. – Pro Kyle Weisenburger of Ottawa, Ohio, caught a five-bass limit weighing 24 pounds, 12 ounces to take the lead on the opening day of the FLW Tour at the Grand Lake presented by Mercury Marine. Pros Todd Castledine of Nacogdoches, Texas (20-2), and Miles Burghoff of Hixson, Tennessee (19-12), are the closest anglers to Weisenburger in second and third place as the four-day tournament, which features 165 of the world’s best bass-fishing professionals casting for a top award of up to $125,000, heads into Day Two.

The weather in northeastern Oklahoma, although overcast, was nice Thursday, although many tournament anglers experienced a Grand Lake that was much more finicky than normal – likely due to fluctuating water levels. The bass are scattered and it’s left many competitors scratching their heads as they try to figure out the puzzle. Weisenburger found his the majority of his big limit in a single pocket, although he was also able to run around his creek arm and replicate his pattern on a couple other spots.

“I had a couple of good little stretches and caught 12 or 13 fish today, which is quadruple anything that I had done in practice,” said Weisenburger, who is fishing in his third season as a pro on the FLW Tour. “I think it was more area-oriented – when I got the stuff I was looking for, I got a couple of bites.

“I caught fish on two different baits,” Weisenburger continued. “I had three rods on my deck, but threw primarily just two baits and when I got in the right area they would really eat one of them. The conditions let me know which one I was going to throw. I checked the forecast and I believe it will be similar tomorrow, which is good because it really set up right for me today.

Weisenburger declined to divulge the specifics on his lures and pattern at this point of the tournament, but did hint that the water he was fishing was a bit dirtier than most.

“I caught one or two more keepers there that didn’t help me, so I decided I was going to ease off of them,” Weisenburger said. “I ended up leaving my primary area and I figured out a little bit of a pattern.

“It was a good day, but it’s only Day One,” Weisenburger went on to say. “I’m going to start in my primary area tomorrow and see where it takes me. Hopefully they’re still there and I will get to fish into the weekend.”

The top 10 pros after day one on Grand Lake are:

 1st: Kyle Weisenburger, Ottawa, Ohio, five bass, 24-12

 2nd: Costa pro Todd Castledine, Nacogdoches, Texas, five bass, 20-2

 3rd: Miles Burghoff, Hixson, Tenn., five bass, 19-12

 4th: Billy McCaghren, Mayflower, Ark., five bass, 19-9

 5th: Bradford Beavers, Summerville, S.C., five bass, 19-0

 6th: Dicky Newberry, Houston, Texas, five bass, 18-9

 7th: Braxton Setzer, Montgomery, Ala., five bass, 17-7

 8th: Christopher Brasher, Longview, Texas, five bass, 17-0

 9th: Bryan Thrift, Shelby, N.C., five bass, 16-12

 10th: Bradley Hallman, Norman, Okla., five bass, 16-5

For a full list of results visit FLWFishing.com.

Burghoff earned Thursday’s $500 Big Bass award in the pro division after bringing an 8-pound largemouth to the scale – the largest fish of the day.

Overall there were 428 bass weighing 1,207 pounds, 2 ounces caught by 143 pros Thursday. The catch included 37 five-bass limits.

In FLW Tour competition, the full field of 165 pro anglers compete in the two-day opening round Thursday and Friday. The top 30 pros based on their two-day accumulated weight advance to Saturday. Only the top 10 pros continue competition Sunday, with the winner determined by the heaviest accumulated weight from the four days of competition.

The total purse for the FLW Tour at Grand Lake presented by Mercury is more than $860,000. The tournament is hosted by the City of Grove and the Cherokee Casino Grove.

Throughout the season, anglers are also vying for valuable points in hopes of qualifying for the 2019 FLW Cup, the world championship of professional bass fishing. The 2019 FLW Cup will be on Lake Hamilton in Hot Springs, Arkansas, Aug. 9-11 and is hosted by the Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism and Visit Hot Springs.

Anglers will take off at 7 a.m. CST Friday through Sunday from Wolf Creek Park, located at 963 N. 16th St., in Grove. Friday’s weigh-in will be held at the park beginning at 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday’s weigh-ins will also be held at the park, but will begin at 4 p.m.

In conjunction with the weigh-ins, FLW will host a free Family Fishing Expo at Wolf Creek Park from 2 to 6 p.m. each day. The Expo is a chance for fishing fans to meet their favorite anglers, enjoy interactive games, activities and giveaways provided by FLW sponsors, and learn more about the sport of fishing and other outdoor activities.

Also for youth, the FLW Foundation’s Unified Fishing Derby will be held at the park on Saturday, March 30 from Noon-2 p.m. The event is hosted by FLW Foundation pro Cody Kelley along with other FLW Tour anglers, and is free and open to anyone under the age of 18 and Special Olympics athletes. Rods and reels are available for use, but youth are encouraged to bring their own if they own one. The 1st and 2nd place anglers that catch the biggest fish will be recognized Saturday on the FLW Tour stage, just prior to the pros weighing in.

Television coverage of the FLW Tour at Grand Lake presented by Mercury will premiere in 2019. The Emmy-nominated “FLW” television show airs each Saturday night at 7 p.m. EST and is broadcast to more than 63 million cable, satellite and telecommunications households in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean on the World Fishing Network (WFN), the leading entertainment destination and digital resource for anglers throughout North America. FLW television is also distributed internationally to FLW partner countries, including Canada, China, Italy, Korea, Mexico, Portugal, Spain and South Africa.

The popular FLW Live on-the-water program will air on Days Three and Four of the event, featuring live action from the boats of the tournament’s top pros each day. New for 2019, host Travis Moran will be joined by Oklahoma Costa FLW Series pro Matt Pangrac to break down the extended action each day from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. On-the-water broadcasts will be live streamed on FLWFishing.com, the FLW YouTube channel and the FLW Facebook page.

Categories
Major League Fishing - Bass Pro Tour/Cup Events

FALLS LAKE ELIMINATION ROUND BATTLE – MLF GROUP A

The first elimination round has just completed on Falls Lake and what a day it was. Temps this morning were hardly above the freezing mark and water temps in the mid-’50s. The expected high was mid-60’s and that should have proven for big bags of fish for the Group A anglers. They had impressive catches on the first shotgun round. However, this area of North Carolina showed it still had big fish to catch, just not the numbers today.

The big fish of the day belongs to Justin Atkins who slayed an 8-pound 12-ounce donkey to comfortably put him in at 11th place where he stayed. Two other big fish tipped scales over 8 pounds and they belong to Edwin Evers and Mark Daniels Jr. It was the number of fish that was the most notable. Only two anglers caught over 10 fish and most anglers stayed just underneath that total. You would have expected the most excitement to be at the top of this groups leaderboard. However, the top few stayed steady today while Kelly Jordan maintained his impressive lead and had to do little to maintain his dominance from his monstrous Day 1 bag.

The real story is with the group of anglers at the cut line and that was an absolute battle. It was a seesaw battle nearly all day between a decent group of anglers. Anglers would remain confindently above the cut, just to get knocked down by another great fish. Most of the day several ounce to a several pounds kept the cut line extremely fluid.

So here is how Group A fared on elimination day.


Place
Angler Day 1 Day 2 Total Weight Day 1 Day 2 Total # Fish Avg Weight Largest Fish
1st Kelly Jordon 82 – 04 11 – 00 93 – 04 26 2 28 4 – 05 6 – 01
2nd Todd Faircloth 63 – 10 8 – 10 72 – 04 20 5 25 2 – 07 2 – 06
3rd Edwin Evers 50 – 06 12 – 09 62 – 15 19 4 23 2 – 14 8 – 07
4th Wesley Strader 47 – 06 12 – 06 59 – 12 15 5 20 2 – 13 4 – 03
5th Greg Vinson 41 – 10 14 – 05 55 – 15 10 5 15 3 – 08 6 – 07
6th Jacob Wheeler 54 – 05 1 – 02 55 – 07 14 1 15 2 – 08 1 – 02
7th Randall Tharp 38 – 03 15 – 12 53 – 15 12 7 19 2 – 12 5 – 14
8th Mark Daniels, Jr. 52 – 01 0 – 00 52 – 01 12 0 12 4 – 05 8 – 06
9th Andy Morgan 31 – 02 16 – 10 47 – 12 10 5 15 3 – 04 5 – 00
10th Mike Iaconelli 31 – 01 14 – 03 45 – 04 12 5 17 2 – 11 6 – 06
11th Justin Atkins 27 – 06 15 – 02 42 – 08 7 5 12 3 – 08 8 – 12
12th Fred Roumbanis 28 – 03 12 – 04 40 – 07 12 4 16 2 – 11 6 – 14
13th Tommy Biffle 29 – 00 11 – 04 40 – 04 10 6 16 2 – 06 3 – 09
14th Josh Bertrand 21 – 04 17 – 04 38 – 08 5 9 14 3 – 01 4 – 03
15th Alton Jones 22 – 01 15 – 08 37 – 09 9 6 15 2 – 08 4 – 03
16th Jared Lintner 17 – 04 18 – 12 36 – 00 8 9 17 2 – 02 6 – 08
17th Fletcher Shryock 24 – 15 9 – 14 34 – 13 7 6 13 2 – 10 2 – 02
18th Andy Montgomery 16 – 04 18 – 09 34 – 13 4 4 8 4 – 06 7 – 04
19th Gary Klein 19 – 14 13 – 08 33 – 06 6 7 13 2 – 10 2 – 10
20th Jacob Powroznik 20 – 01 12 – 13 32 – 14 8 5 13 2 – 09 4 – 06
21st Michael Neal 15 – 08 17 – 04 32 – 12 4 11 15 2 – 12 4 – 03
22nd Luke Clausen 18 – 09 13 – 13 32 – 06 5 8 13 2 – 12 3 – 07
23rd John Murray 25 – 12 6 – 09 32 – 05 6 2 8 3 – 13 5 – 09
24th Gerald Swindle 18 – 09 13 – 00 31 – 09 6 4 10 3 – 03 3 – 14
25th Kevin VanDam 14 – 11 16 – 12 31 – 07 4 10 14 2 – 11 2 – 08
26th Brent Ehrler 14 – 06 16 – 07 30 – 13 6 9 15 2 – 02 5 – 09
27th Cody Meyer 21 – 04 9 – 00 30 – 04 6 7 13 2 – 07 1 – 10
28th James Watson 12 – 11 16 – 09 29 – 04 3 8 11 3 – 02 3 – 14
29th Boyd Duckett 15 – 12 12 – 13 28 – 09 6 6 12 2 – 06 4 – 01
30th Alton Jones Jr. 11 – 00 16 – 08 27 – 08 3 8 11 2 – 14 4 – 03
31st Cliff Crochet 14 – 08 12 – 12 27 – 04 4 4 8 3 – 07 4 – 06
32nd Adrian Avena 20 – 06 6 – 09 26 – 15 9 3 12 2 – 04 3 – 07
33rd Jason Christie 19 – 03 5 – 00 24 – 03 4 2 6 3 – 10 3 – 05
34th Zack Birge 9 – 14 10 – 12 20 – 10 5 3 8 2 – 12 4 – 12
35th Mark Davis 4 – 15 11 – 06 16 – 05 2 7 9 2 – 01 3 – 04
36th Paul Elias 7 – 06 8 – 13 16 – 03 2 5 7 2 – 12 2 – 14
37th Brandon Coulter 7 – 14 7 – 08 15 – 06 2 3 5 3 – 04 4 – 07
38th Jason Lambert 2 – 13 7 – 03 10 – 00 2 4 6 1 – 10 2 – 10
39th Shin Fukae 2 – 10 6 – 11 9 – 05 1 5 6 1 – 16 1 – 09
40th Anthony Gagliardi 0 – 00 2 – 03 2 – 03 0 2 2 0 – 09 1 – 03
Categories
Major League Fishing - Bass Pro Tour/Cup Events

BIG FISH DAY 2 – MLF GROUP B ANGLERS SHOW LAKE JORDAN STILL HAS BIG FISH TO GIVE UP

Day 2 of the Major League Fishing Stage 3 in Raleigh NC on Lake Jordan has once again proved fruitful for anglers fishing in Group B. Those anglers were faced with an overnight cold front that didn’t seem to affect the big fish bite what so ever. It may have affected the overall bags that anglers brought in today. Because the biggest bag would have come in at 6th place the day before with Group A. Maybe it was the glooming morning that proved so beneficial the day before. As the sun rose today the bite seemed to slow with the exception of the big fish bite.

Day 2 was dominated by big fish, over 20 fish breaking the 5lb mark. It was Ish Monroe who is known for big bags of fish came out blazing this morning with multiple big fish. He highlighted his morning with back to back big bass weighing in at 5lbs and 7lbs within minutes. However, that big fish belongs to David Walker who hauled in a pig that tipped the scales at 8 pounds 6 ounces. One other fished topped 8 pounds while 4 more came in over 7 pounds.

The big bag belonged to David Walker who just barely passed over Ott Defoe, Casey Ashley, Brett Hite, Ish Monroe, and Takahiro Omori. Big changes are in store as all the angler will make the move to Falls Lake. It was originally discussed that the fish found on Falls Lake would not be as big and even talk that mentioned anglers would struggle to catch fish on this lake. However, these top spring power anglers are sure to prove that wrong and a great showing is in store for the next phase of the landmark event in North Carolina. Check back for more info!

Here is the Day 1 Wrap Up Courtesy of Major League Fishing

By Major League Fishing – March 27, 2019


Texas pro Kelly Jordon dominates Shotgun Round 1 on North Carolina’s Jordan Lake, catching 26 scorable bass that totaled 82 pounds, 4 ounces.

RALEIGH, N.C. (March 26, 2019) – It took virtually no time for the chunky northern-strain largemouth of North Carolina to reveal themselves on Major League Fishing® (MLF) Bass Pro Tour’s Day 1 of the Favorite Fishing Stage Three Raleigh presented by Evinrude: Jason Christie boated a 7-pound, 12-ouncer just 4 minutes into competition on Jordan Lake, the first fish of the day. 

Christie’s opening shot was just the beginning: By the end of Shotgun Round 1, 11 7-pounders and 48 fish over 5 pounds made it onto SCORETRACKER™, an astoundingly impressive showing for an unknown fishery that most of the field of 80 had never even seen before practice. 

But even more impressive was the fish-catching clinic put on by Kelly Jordon.

Fishing his way around a shallow creek arm of this impoundment of the Cape Fear River system north of Raleigh, the Texas pro piled up 82-4 on 26 fish, not only winning the round by over 18 pounds, but also establishing a new single-day MLF Bass Pro Tour weight total.

“It was just an awesome, awesome day,” Jordon said. “This area had gotten a ton of rain, and then the water dropped so much, I thought ‘Maybe this isn’t going to happen’, but guess what? The fish are still here. There’s no telling how much I could’ve caught if it had stayed warm. But what a fishery.”

Jordon did the majority of his damage with an Evergreen Jack Hammer bladed jig with a Lake Fork Tackle Live Magic Shad trailer, and he did it consistently for the first five hours of competition, pinging SCORETRACKER with four to five scorable largemouth per hour until he hit a brief lull late in the afternoon. 

He found some good ones, too, highlighting his day with seven 5-plus-pounders, including a 5-2 and 5-6 in the final five minutes of competition. 

“Anytime you catch 82 pounds in a day of fishing is an awesome day, and I didn’t want to quit fishing,” Jordon admitted. “It was sad, I wanted to keep fishing because they were starting to fire off again. It was one of those days to remember.”

The rest of the field, while lagging a sizeable distance behind Jordon for most of the day, had some notable success as well.

Todd Faircloth chipped away at Jordon’s lead all afternoon, finishing the round with 63-10 and connecting with the biggest fish of the day, a 9-4 giant that inhaled a jig early in the third period. Faircloth stacked up over 35 pounds of largemouth in the final period to trim Jordon’s lead to 10 pounds before K.J. caught his final two 5-pounders.

Todd Faircloth caught the Berkley Big Bass of the day with a 9-4.

“We had that front pulling through, the lake dropped a little bit from yesterday and I started out fishing on the points, fishing out a little bit, and caught a couple small fish and at the end of the first period,” Faircloth said. “I decided to just change areas and change techniques, and boy did it pay off in big ways.”

Jacob Wheeler and Mark Daniels, Jr. combined for 102-7, Wheeler with 54-5 and Daniels with 52-1. In one 2 ½-hour stretch in the third period, Daniels caught five fish for 27-13. Nine of Wheeler’s 14 fish were 4 pounds or better. 

Edwin Evers continued his season of consistency, catching 19 fish for 50-6 and fifth place. That marks Evers’ fourth consecutive round finishing in the Top 5.

Surprised … or Not?

The field’s big-fish success didn’t come as a surprise to MLF NOW! analyst Marty Stone, who touted the big-fish potential of the Raleigh-area lakes, and was instrumental in bringing the Bass Pro Tour to North Carolina. As Stone repeatedly reported in the weeks leading up to the event, Jordan Lake was set up for a record-breaking performance, despite the fluctuating water levels.  

“I think the size of the fish caught these guys off guard a little bit,” Stone said.

The number of fish caught was definitely a surprise to much of the field, too. Thanks to plummeting water levels and dirty water, many of the pros struggled mightily in practice, and most expressed some doubt that they would catch many fish on Jordan. But as he stowed his rods at the end of the day, Wheeler summed it up best: “What can you say? This place is legit!. I mean, wow, it’s got ’em.”

Group B Up Next

The second half of the field gets its first crack at Jordan Lake on Wednesday when Group B competition begins. Conditions could be slightly more challenging in the morning, as nighttime lows will dip to near freezing, but a forecast of afternoon sunshine translates into a possible strong afternoon bite.  

Looking Ahead to the Week

The field will carry their Shotgun Round weights to Falls Lake on Thursday and Friday for the Elimination Rounds. The Top 20 anglers from each Elimination group will advance to the Knockout Round on Saturday (also on Falls).

The Top 10 anglers in the Knockout Round will advance to the Championship Round on Shearon Harris Reservoir, a 4,100-acre power plant lake that’s known for its population of 6-plus-pound largemouth.

How, When, Where to Watch

Competition begins daily at 7:30 a.m. EDT, with live, official scoring available via SCORETRACKER on MajorLeagueFishing.com and on the MLF app. The MLF NOW! live stream starts at 10 a.m. EDT, with live, on-the-water coverage continuing until lines out at 3:30 p.m. The Berkley Postgame Show live stream will start at 5 p.m. daily.   

Quotable

Kelly Jordon (1st/82-4) – “The water was dropping out in my area, and I thought the fish were leaving. I think a lot of them did. I was scared to death: It rained last night, and I thought it was just going to blow (that area) out, which it didn’t. It did get kind of muddy in there, and probably dropped 6 to 8 inches. Coming out, I had to jump over a beaver dam. I had to put my engine up on it and power over it, and I’ve never had to do that before. Boyd (Duckett) showed me how to do that, because he does it all the time. I figured I would just gun it and try it, and that’s what I did.”

Jacob Wheeler (3rd/54-5) – “All I can say is ‘Wow!’ It’s a phenomenal fishery. It seemed like every bite was 3 to 5 pounds or 5 to 6 pounds. Overall, the number of quality fish that live in that lake is just astounding. You would’ve thought with that cold night, it would get a little tougher, and it didn’t seem that way. This morning I didn’t know if it was going to be that hot and heavy first thing, but I figured when the sun popped out, it would probably be pretty decent. It was pretty consistent all day.”

Edwin Evers (5th/50-6) – “I got some bites early, and that’s just what I needed to get my confidence going. I was just running with it and expanding on it, and man I’m just happy. The last day of practice I kind of figured this deal out, and I’m just happy to have it. I don’t know if I can get a bite on (Falls Lake).”

The Day’s Results 

To see all results from Shotgun Round Group A anglers, and to keep up with cumulative results throughout the week, visit MajorLeagueFishing.com and click “Results.” 

About Major League Fishing   

Founded in 2011, Major League Fishing (MLF) brings the high-intensity sport of competitive bass fishing into America’s living rooms on Outdoor Channel, Discovery, CBS, CBS Sports Network, World Fishing Network, Sportsman Channel and on-demand on MyOutdoorTV (MOTV). New for 2019, the Bass Pro Tour consists of eight events and a championship streamed live on www.MajorLeagueFishing.com and MOTV. MLF uses the entertaining and conservation-friendly catch, weigh and immediate-release format where every scorable bass counts and the winner is the angler with the highest cumulative weight. For more information on the league and anglers, visit www.majorleaguefishing.com and follow MLF on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. For more in-depth coverage, see Game & Fish magazine, the official publication of MLF.


Categories
Major League Fishing - Bass Pro Tour/Cup Events

RECORD SETTING DAY FOR MLF STAGE 3 – GET THE LATEST FROM DAY 1

The timing couldn’t have been more key for the planning of Stage 3 on the MLF Bass Pro Tour in Raleigh NC. Lake Jordan has proven to be very monumental for the first group of anglers. The water temps are stretching into the upper 50’s and pushing some giants into the shallow showing record-setting catches. Lure choice has also been a hot topic on this stop of this tournament as well. This is sure to be an exciting tournament solely based upon how day 1 has gone on. 

Let’s talk about big fish and the plethora that has been caught on Day 1. So far at least 16 bass have been caught that have tipped the scales over 6 pounds. The is absolutely astonishing considering just a few weeks ago hardly any fish over 5 pounds were caught at the Classic. So far today’s big fish belongs to Todd Faircloth and his whopping 9 pounds 4-ounce behemoth that surged him into second place. The big news is the current first place angler, Kelly Jordan who had raked in 26 fish for 82 pounds, that right 82 pounds!!! Kelly’s largest fish tipped the scales at just over 6 pounds. Kelly Jordan has now set a new Major League Fishing record originally set by MLF Pro Marty Robinson on Kissimmee Lake. This is absolutely a monumental day in MLF history.

Lure choice has also been highlighted at this tournament and set up by a recent article on MLF from Marty Stone on the trio of lures that will be key to winning this stage in Raleigh. Marty’s call was for the jig, square bill, and spinner bait to be key on this fishery. His ideas have been nothing but true and some of the biggest fish have been caught on the jig. This tournament has also shown the importance of the spinnerbait and how it is still relevant in professional fishing today. A majority of anglers have actively used this tried and true method of catching big bags of hungry spring bass.

Based upon the way day one is playing out, the second group tomorrow should be just as big if the weather continues to hold out and lake levels don’t dramatically influence this hot spring bite. Check back for the latest news on MLF!

Stage Three’s New Waters

The three lakes that the Bass Pro Tour field will compete on in Favorite Fishing Stage Three Raleigh Presented by Evinrude – Falls Lake, Jordan Lake and Shearon Harris Reservoir – will be “new waters” for the majority of the 80-angler field. None of these lakes have previously hosted a “tour-level” event, and only a small handful of the field has any experience on the lakes. Geographic proximity likely won’t play into any advantage (or disadvantage) – while there are five Bass Pro Tour anglers from the Carolinas, all five hail from South Carolina.

Carolina in my Mind

Five of the 80 anglers competing on the MLF Bass Pro Tour hail from South Carolina. The Carolinians you’ll see competing in Raleigh include:

Casey Ashley (Donalds) – Winner of the 2015 Bassmaster Classic and 10 additional tour-level victories.

Anthony Gagliardi (Prosperity) – One of only a handful of anglers who have won both FLW Tour Angler of the Year (2006) and a Forrest Wood Cup (2014)

Andy Montgomery (Blacksburg) – Twice a tour-level winner and owner of 34 Top 10s in his professional career.

Britt Myers (Lake Wylie) – A two-time tour-level winner, Myers also has 15 Top 10s to his credit.

Marty Robinson (Lyman) – Owner of 22 career Top 10s, Robinson has over $700,000 in career winnings.

Falls, Jordan Set for Shotgun, Elimination, Knockout

Because of the unique flexibility of the MLF Bass Pro Tour to compete on smaller local waters, the first five days of competition will split time between Falls and Jordan lakes. That includes the two Shotgun and Elimination Rounds, and the Knockout Round.

Championship Lake Shearon Harris: “Small but Mighty”

At 4,100 surface acres, Shearon Harris Reservoir – the site of the 10-angler Championship Round – is by far the smallest of the three lakes that the field will compete on. But as MLF NOW! live stream analyst Marty Stone (a North Carolina native) points out, “Shearon Harris is small but mighty. Shearon Harris is small, but it’s so good. It’s a really special lake.”

How Mighty? THIS Mighty

Big fish are the hallmark of all three fisheries, but Shearon Harris in particular has produced some eye-popping results in the recent past: the same co-ed team competing in two tournaments in early March of 2017 weighed in five-fish limits of 41.93 and 46.89 pounds.

From the Local Pro’s Perspective

Stone, who competed as a pro for 15 years prior to his MLF broadcasting duties, hails from Fayetteville, North Carolina, and has fished all three lakes multiple times. Here’s what he has to say about…

Jordan and Falls Lakes: Most of the bass will run from 2 ¼ to 6 pounds, and we should see several 7- to 8-pounders. I stopped for a couple of days at Falls (recently) and I caught 25 pounds for my best 5 fish. These are pure Northern-strain largemouth, and they grow big here. We’re coming to them at the prime time for quality fish. Don’t be surprised to see a double-digit bass caught out of one of them.”

Shearon Harris Reservoir: If the bass are up shallow in the primrose (on Shearon Harris), look out. Those fish can be big. And I mean BIG. Get your braid out, and you’d better have your feet on the deck … they might pull you in. Shearon Harris has better numbers of fish than Falls and Jordan lakes, and it has huge fish, too. I’ve broken the mid-30s with my five largest weighable fish on this lake.”

Daily Wrap-up

After each day of competition, the Bass Pro Tour Postgame Show presented by Berkley will be held at the Bass Pro Tour set, located at Bass Pro Shops (801 Bass Pro Ln., Cary, NC 27513) Tuesday, March 26, through Sunday, March 31. The Postgame show begins at approximately 5 p.m. EDT each day. Admission to the Postgame Show is free of charge. 

Up-To-The-Minute Results

Unable to make it to Raleigh for Stage Three? Do as 1.2 million others that were not able to make it to Bass Pro Tour Huk Stage Two presented by Favorite Fishing in Conroe, Texas, did and log on to the all-new MajorLeagueFishing.com. Click “Watch MLF NOW!” to watch more than seven hours of live competition including a daily Postgame Show that begins at 5 p.m. EDT.

Catch the Action

MLF NOW!’s live streaming broadcast of the Bass Pro Tour will feature 10 cameras/cameramen shooting on board competitor’s boats throughout all six rounds of each event. Each day’s on-the-water live stream will run five to five-and-a-half hours in a network gameday- like broadcast. Tune in by logging on to MajorLeagueFishing.com or by downloading the Major League Fishing app on your smart device.

How We Got Here

Major League Fishing invited 80 of the world’s best anglers to compete in the inaugural season of the Bass Pro Tour. The roster is comprised of Bassmaster Classic champions, FLW Forrest Wood Cup winners, Anglers of the Year and top tour performers from throughout the world of competitive bass fishing.

How it Works

The format for Major League Fishing Bass Pro Tour events will be similar to the General Tire World Championship events that aired on CBS in 2017 and 2018. The 80 anglers will be separated into two groups, 40 anglers in each. Tuesday, March 26 and Wednesday, March 27 are Shotgun Rounds 1 and 2, where 40 anglers (Group A and Group B) compete to catch the highest cumulative two-day weight each day. Thursday, March 28 and Friday, March 29 are Elimination Rounds 1 and 2 where 40 anglers (Group A and Group B) compete to catch the highest two-day cumulative weight. Anglers’ Shotgun Round weight is combined with the weight they catch in the Elimination Round. The top 20 anglers from each group advance to the Knockout Round. Saturday, March 30 is the Knockout Round where 40 anglers (top 20 from each Elimination Round) compete. All anglers will begin the Knockout Round with zero weight. The Top-10 finishers advance to the Championship Round on Sunday, March 31 when they will compete to catch the highest weight. All anglers will begin the Championship Round with zero weight. A camera in every boat will livestream the action from Championship Sunday on MajorLeagueFishing.com.Military Appreciation Day

 

Phoenix boats will provide a Daily Leader award, paying $500 to the angler leading days 1-4 of each Stage.

Berkley Big Bass of the Day

The angler that catches the largest bass of the day will be awarded the Berkley Big Bass of the Day. The angler with the largest bass caught throughout the competition will win $1,000.

Semper Fish! 
Joe, The National Angler

Categories
BASSMASTER Elite Series/Opens

THIS WAS THE HOTTEST COLOR OF THE 2019 BASSMASTER CLASSIC

Photo by: Seigo Saito

As I look back over the years of watching professional fishing, not one dominant pattern has ever been so noticeable to me. On the official practice day of the classic I had the chance to ride with Justin Lucas and that is when I first notice this color pattern emerge. The crankbait was obviously a dominate force for this tournament.

Crankbaits ranged from manufacturers that were used and most where a usual shallow square bill, to flat side, and the ever-favorite rattle trap style bait. Even during the Bassmaster High School and College Championships events that where held nearby the crankbait was key for limits and eventually wins.  2019 Bassmaster Classic anglers used crankbaits like the Spro Fat John 60, Berkley Frittside, Rapala DT 4/6 & Balsa BX Extreme Brat Squarebill, PH Customs Hand Carved Lil Guy, Bill Lewis Rattle-Trap & MR-6, Jackall Bling 55, Storm Arashi Vibe.

Jacob Wheeler and the DT6 in Red Craw

The color of choice for all but one of those crankbaits was some variation of the red craw color. This color was absolutely favored by anglers in the classic. When anglers got up on stage to talk about that day’s catches, you constantly heard red craw, red craw, red craw…. like I said even the high school and college championship tournaments were dominated by the red craw color.

I had a chance to take part in a few backstage talks with several of the anglers from the classic about the color. It was even brought up about the use of the red color in areas where you won’t find crawfish in that color. The overwhelming response was the color creates a reaction in fish even when red crawfish are not present. The other thing mentioned was some crawfish turn red during the spring spawn that also attracts the attention of bass.

2019 Bassmaster Classic Champion Ott Defoe with the Storm Arashi Vibe in Red Craw

Actually, all spring during the FLW, MLF, and Bassmaster the red color has been key. So, what is your favorite red craw color and crankbait that you use. If you haven’t used one before, what are you waiting for?

Semper Fish!

Joe, The National Angler

Categories
MLF BIG-5

THIS ANGLER SEALED THE DEAL WITH ONE OF THE BIGGEST BAGS IN FLW HISTORY – WINS COSTA FLW SERIES TOURNAMENT ON LAKE CHICKAMAUGA PRESENTED BY T-H MARINE

DAYTON, Tenn. (March 23, 2019) – Fishing in his sixth event with Fishing League Worldwide (FLW), pro Brent Butler of Vonore, Tennessee, caught a five-bass limit Saturday weighing 16 pounds, 11 ounces, to win theCosta FLW Series at Lake Chickamauga presented by T-H Marine. Butler’s three-day total of 15 bass weighing 68 pounds, 8 ounces, was enough to earn him the victory at the Southeastern Division tournament and a check for $45,800.

In route to victory, Butler posted an above-average start to the tournament Thursday, catching 14 pounds of bass to sit in 40th place. He said he put together his limit fishing shallow bars and shell beds mid-lake, with a ½-ounce, chrome-colored Strike King Red Eye Shad crankbait.

Heading into Friday, Butler said he knew he needed more weight to have a shot at winning. He switched patterns completely, fishing seven new areas near major creek mouths, and produced a 37-pound, 5-ounce haul – the fifth-largest limit in FLW Series history.

“All I was catching [Thursday] was buck bass, and with 14 [pounds] and change, I knew I needed to swing for the fences,” said Butler, who earned his first win in FLW competition. “I started looking for staging areas for both prespawn and postspawn females. I went offshore, and honestly, I got my timing down and saw what the bait was doing – how it was hanging out off of ledges and things of that nature. I just kept paying attention to it and the wind direction and I would occasionally see them on the graph and knew they were in the area. They were following gizzard shad. I sat in 30 feet and caught them out of 15 feet of water.

“I think they were heading in [prespawn], but the two big ones – two 10-plus pounders – were postspawn,” continued Butler. “I caught them almost on back-to-back casts.”

Butler said he had seven bites Friday. He said he used a custom Super G Lures umbrella rig with 4.3-inch, shad-colored Keitech swimbaits to catch three of the monster limit and a chartreuse and shad-colored Lucky Craft Flash Pointer 100 jerkbait for the other two.

On Saturday, Butler didn’t catch nearly as much weight as he did Friday, but was able to put together the right bites at the end of the day.

“I ran those areas again today, and I saw the bait down in the creek and river channels. I only saw one school of gizzard shad come up under my graph in 15 of water and I could see two [bass] following it, but I couldn’t get them to cooperate. That was the only school I saw out of all those areas.”

With only one small bass in the boat at 1 [p.m.], Butler again made a change, running 32 miles to fish shallow ledges with stumps between the Highway 60 bridge and Mud Creek. He caught a couple more fish on the umbrella rig, one on the Red Eye Shad and three on the Lucky Craft jerkbait.

The top 10 pros on Lake Chickamauga finished:

1st: Brent Butler, Vonore, Tenn., 15 bass, 68-8, $45,800

2nd: Bryan Thrift, Shelby, N.C., 15 bass, 63-0, $17,200

3rd: Derek Hicks, Rocky Face, Ga., 15 bass, 61-0, $12,850

4th: Cody Nichols, Fayette, Ala., 15 bass, 57-11, $10,750

5th: David Gaston, Sylacauga, Tenn., 15 bass, 53-13, $9,750

6th: Rusty White, Harrison, Tenn., 10 bass, 52-10, $8,675

7th: Dustin Evans, Eads, Tenn., 15 bass, 49-8, $7,300

8th: Brandon Stanley, Johnson City, Tenn., 12 bass, 48-12, $6,300

9th: Buddy Gross, Chickamauga, Ga., 14 bass, 48-3, $5,300

10th: Steve Stanfill, Dawsonville, Ga., 10 bass, 38-14, $4,200

A complete list of results will be posted atFLWFishing.com.

One of Butler’s giants on Friday weighed 11 pounds, 10 ounces, and was the biggest of the tournament in the Pro Division. For his catch, Butler also earned the day’s Boater Big Bass award of $300.

Scott Ostmann of Cincinnati, Ohio, won the Co-angler Division with a three-day total catch of 15 bass weighing 54 pounds, 12 ounces. For his win, Ostmann took home a prize package including a Ranger Z175 with a 115-horsepower outboard motor and $5,000.

The top 10 co-anglers on Lake Chickamauga finished:

1st: Scott Ostmann, Cincinnati, Ohio, 15 bass, 54-12, $32,800

2nd: Doug Iorio II, Kennerdell, Pa., 14 bass, 41-15, $5,375

3rd: Kevin Gordon, Aiken, S.C., 12 bass, 40-9, $4,350

4th: Alan Hults, Gautier, Miss., 13 bass, 38-14, $3,900

5th: Josh Womack, Gallatin, Tenn., 14 bass, 35-8, $3,150

6th: Don Lewis, Jacksonville, Fla., 10 bass, 32-15, $2,650

7th: Michael Leach, The Woodlands, Texas, 10 bass, 32-0, $2,150

8th: Stephen Kocell, Waxhaw, N.C., nine bass, 25-15, $1,925

9th: Josh Lockard, Somerset, Ky., 10 bass, 22-10, $1,530

10th: Tony Prince, Pulaski, Tenn., nine bass, 22-7, $1,290

Scott Towry of Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, caught the biggest bass of the tournament in the Co-angler Division Friday, a behemoth largemouth weighing 11 pounds, 2 ounces. For his catch, Towry earned the day’s Co-angler Big Bass award of $200.

The Costa FLW Series on Lake Chickamauga presented by T-H Marine was hosted by Fish Dayton. It was the second of three Southeastern Division tournaments of the 2019 regular season. The next tournament for FLW Series anglers will be the Costa FLW Series at Kentucky Lake presented by Lowrance, held April 4 – 6 in Gilbertsville, Kentucky. For a complete schedule, visitFLWFishing.com.

The Costa FLW Series consists of five U.S. divisions – Central, Northern, Southeastern, Southwestern and Western – along with the International division. Each U.S. division consists of three regular-season tournaments with competitors vying for valuable points that could earn them the opportunity to compete in the season-ending Costa FLW Series Championship. The 2019 Costa FLW Series Championship is being held Oct. 31 – Nov. 2 on Lake Cumberland in Burnside, Kentucky.